The reconcile loop sets `DeploymentState.DesiredCanaries` only on the first
pass through the loop and if the job is not paused/pending. In MRD,
deployments will make one pass though the loop while "pending", and were not
ever getting `DesiredCanaries` set. We can't set it in the initial
`DeploymentState` constructor because the first pass through setting up
canaries expects it's not there yet. However, this value is static for a given
version of a job because it's coming from the update stanza, so it's safe to
re-assign the value on subsequent passes.
The field name `Deployment.TaskGroups` contains a map of `DeploymentState`,
which makes it a little harder to follow state updates when combined with
inconsistent naming conventions, particularly when we also have the state
store or actual `TaskGroup`s in scope. This changeset changes all uses to
`dstate` so as not to be confused with actual TaskGroups.
If a job update includes a task group that has no changes, those allocations
have their version bumped in-place. The ends up triggering an eval from
`deploymentwatcher` when it verifies their health. Although this eval is a
no-op, we were only treating pending deployments the same as paused when
the deployment was a new MRD. This means that any eval after the initial one
will kick off the deployment, and that caused pending deployments to "jump
the queue" and run ahead of schedule, breaking MRD invariants and resulting in
a state with all regions blocked.
This behavior can be replicated even in the case of job updates with no
in-place updates by patching `deploymentwatcher` to inject a spurious no-op
eval. This changeset fixes the behavior by treating pending deployments the
same as paused in all cases in the reconciler.
Deployments should wait until kicked off by `Job.Register` so that we can
assert that all regions have a scheduled deployment before starting any
region. This changeset includes the OSS fixes to support the ENT work.
`IsMultiregionStarter` has no more callers in OSS, so remove it here.
* ar: support opting into binding host ports to default network IP
* fix config plumbing
* plumb node address into network resource
* struct: only handle network resource upgrade path once
Pre-0.12.0 beta, a deployment was considered "complete" if it was
successful. But with MRD we have "blocked" and "unblocking" states as well. We
did not consider the case where a concurrent alloc health status update
triggers a `Compute` call on a deployment that's moved from "blocked" to
"unblocking" (it's a small window), which caused an extra pass thru the
`nextRegion` logic in `deploymentwatcher` and triggered an error when later
transitioning to "successful".
This changeset makes sure we don't overwrite that status.
In #8209 we fixed the `max_parallel` stanza for multiregion by introducing the
`IsMultiregionStarter` check, but didn't apply it to the earlier place its
required. The result is that deployments start but don't place allocations.
If `max_parallel` is not set, all regions should begin in a `running` state
rather than a `pending` state. Otherwise the first region is set to `running`
and then all the remaining regions once it enters `blocked. That behavior is
technically correct in that we have at most `max_parallel` regions running,
but definitely not what a user expects.
The `paused` state is used as an operator safety mechanism, so that they can
debug a deployment or halt one that's causing a wider failure. By using the
`paused` state as the first state of a multiregion deployment, we risked
resuming an intentionally operator-paused deployment because of activity in a
peer region.
This changeset replaces the use of the `paused` state with a `pending` state,
and provides a `Deployment.Run` internal RPC to replace the use of the
`Deployment.Pause` (resume) RPC we were using in `deploymentwatcher`.
* `nextRegion` should take status parameter
* thread Deployment/Job RPCs thru `nextRegion`
* add `nextRegion` calls to `deploymentwatcher`
* use a better description for paused for peer
* scheduler/reconcile: set FollowupEvalID on lost stop_after_client_disconnect
* scheduler/reconcile: thread follupEvalIDs through to results.stop
* scheduler/reconcile: comment typo
* nomad/_test: correct arguments for plan.AppendStoppedAlloc
* scheduler/reconcile: avoid nil, cleanup handleDelayed(Lost|Reschedules)
* client/heartbeatstop: reversed time condition for startup grace
* scheduler/generic_sched: use `delayInstead` to avoid a loop
Without protecting the loop that creates followUpEvals, a delayed eval
is allowed to create an immediate subsequent delayed eval. For both
`stop_after_client_disconnect` and the `reschedule` block, a delayed
eval should always produce some immediate result (running or blocked)
and then only after the outcome of that eval produce a second delayed
eval.
* scheduler/reconcile: lostLater are different than delayedReschedules
Just slightly. `lostLater` allocs should be used to create batched
evaluations, but `handleDelayedReschedules` assumes that the
allocations are in the untainted set. When it creates the in-place
updates to those allocations at the end, it causes the allocation to
be treated as running over in the planner, which causes the initial
`stop_after_client_disconnect` evaluation to be retried by the worker.
* jobspec, api: add stop_after_client_disconnect
* nomad/state/state_store: error message typo
* structs: alloc methods to support stop_after_client_disconnect
1. a global AllocStates to track status changes with timestamps. We
need this to track the time at which the alloc became lost
originally.
2. ShouldClientStop() and WaitClientStop() to actually do the math
* scheduler/reconcile_util: delayByStopAfterClientDisconnect
* scheduler/reconcile: use delayByStopAfterClientDisconnect
* scheduler/util: updateNonTerminalAllocsToLost comments
This was setup to only update allocs to lost if the DesiredStatus had
already been set by the scheduler. It seems like the intention was to
update the status from any non-terminal state, and not all lost allocs
have been marked stop or evict by now
* scheduler/testing: AssertEvalStatus just use require
* scheduler/generic_sched: don't create a blocked eval if delayed
* scheduler/generic_sched_test: several scheduling cases
The BinPackIter accounted for node reservations twice when scoring nodes
which could bias scores toward nodes with reservations.
Pseudo-code for previous algorithm:
```
proposed = reservedResources + sum(allocsResources)
available = nodeResources - reservedResources
score = 1 - (proposed / available)
```
The node's reserved resources are added to the total resources used by
allocations, and then the node's reserved resources are later
substracted from the node's overall resources.
The new algorithm is:
```
proposed = sum(allocResources)
available = nodeResources - reservedResources
score = 1 - (proposed / available)
```
The node's reserved resources are no longer added to the total resources
used by allocations.
My guess as to how this bug happened is that the resource utilization
variable (`util`) is calculated and returned by the `AllocsFit` function
which needs to take reserved resources into account as a basic
feasibility check.
To avoid re-calculating alloc resource usage (because there may be a
large number of allocs), we reused `util` in the `ScoreFit` function.
`ScoreFit` properly accounts for reserved resources by subtracting them
from the node's overall resources. However since `util` _also_ took
reserved resources into account the score would be incorrect.
Prior to the fix the added test output:
```
Node: reserved Score: 1.0000
Node: reserved2 Score: 1.0000
Node: no-reserved Score: 0.9741
```
The scores being 1.0 for *both* nodes with reserved resources is a good
hint something is wrong as they should receive different scores. Upon
further inspection the double accounting of reserved resources caused
their scores to be >1.0 and clamped.
After the fix the added test outputs:
```
Node: no-reserved Score: 0.9741
Node: reserved Score: 0.9480
Node: reserved2 Score: 0.8717
```
* nomad/structs/csi: split CanWrite into health, in use
* scheduler/scheduler: expose AllocByID in the state interface
* nomad/state/state_store_test
* scheduler/stack: SetJobID on the matcher
* scheduler/feasible: when a volume writer is in use, check if it's us
* scheduler/feasible: remove SetJob
* nomad/state/state_store: denormalize allocs before Claim
* nomad/structs/csi: return errors on claim, with context
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: new alloc doesn't look like an update
* nomad/state/state_store_test: change test reference to CanWrite
* nomad/state/schema: use the namespace compound index
* scheduler/scheduler: CSIVolumeByID interface signature namespace
* scheduler/stack: SetJob on CSIVolumeChecker to capture namespace
* scheduler/feasible: pass the captured namespace to CSIVolumeByID
* nomad/state/state_store: use namespace in csi_volume index
* nomad/fsm: pass namespace to CSIVolumeDeregister & Claim
* nomad/core_sched: pass the namespace in volumeClaimReap
* nomad/node_endpoint_test: namespaces in Claim testing
* nomad/csi_endpoint: pass RequestNamespace to state.*
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: appropriately failed test
* command/alloc_status_test: appropriately failed test
* node_endpoint_test: avoid notTheNamespace for the job
* scheduler/feasible_test: call SetJob to capture the namespace
* nomad/csi_endpoint: ACL check the req namespace, query by namespace
* nomad/state/state_store: remove deregister namespace check
* nomad/state/state_store: remove unused CSIVolumes
* scheduler/feasible: CSIVolumeChecker SetJob -> SetNamespace
* nomad/csi_endpoint: ACL check
* nomad/state/state_store_test: remove call to state.CSIVolumes
* nomad/core_sched_test: job namespace match so claim gc works
Previously we were looking up plugins based on the Alias Name for a CSI
Volume within the context of its task group.
Here we first look up a volume based on its identifier and then validate
the existence of the plugin based on its `PluginID`.
This commit filters the jobs volumes when setting them on the
feasibility checker. This ensures that the rest of the checker does not
have to worry about non-csi volumes.
* state_store: csi volumes/plugins store the index in the txn
* nomad: csi_endpoint_test require index checks need uint64()
* nomad: other tests using int 0 not uint64(0)
* structs: pass index into New, but not other struct methods
* state_store: csi plugin indexes, use new struct interface
* nomad: csi_endpoint_test check index/query meta (on explicit 0)
* structs: NewCSIVolume takes an index arg now
* scheduler/test: NewCSIVolume takes an index arg now
diffSystemAllocs -> diffSystemAllocsForNode, this function is only used
for diffing system allocations, but lacked awareness of eligible
nodes and the node ID that the allocation was going to be placed.
This change now ignores a change if its existing allocation is on an
ineligible node. For a new allocation, it also checks tainted and
ineligible nodes in the same function instead of nil-ing out the diff
after computation in diffSystemAllocs
If an existing system allocation is running and the node its running on
is marked as ineligible, subsequent plan/applys return an RPC error
instead of a more helpful plan result.
This change logs the error, and appends a failedTGAlloc for the
placement.
If an alloc is being preempted and marked as evict, but the underlying
node is lost before the migration takes place, the allocation currently
stays as desired evict, status running forever, or until the node comes
back online.
This commit updates updateNonTerminalAllocsToLost to check for a
destired status of Evict as well as Stop when updating allocations on
tainted nodes.
switch to table test for lost node cases
We currently log an error if preemption is unable to find a suitable set of
allocations to preempt. This commit changes that to debug level since not finding
preemptable allocations is not an error condition.
Fixes#5856
When the scheduler looks for a placement for an allocation that's
replacing another allocation, it's supposed to penalize the previous
node if the allocation had been rescheduled or failed. But we're
currently always penalizing the node, which leads to unnecessary
migrations on job update.
This commit leaves in place the existing behavior where if the
previous alloc was itself rescheduled, its previous nodes are also
penalized. This is conservative but the right behavior especially on
larger clusters where a group of hosts might be having correlated
trouble (like an AZ failure).
Co-Authored-By: Michael Schurter <mschurter@hashicorp.com>
Fixes#6787
In ProposedAllocs the proposed alloc slice was being copied while its
contents were not. Since RemoveAllocs nils elements of the proposed
alloc slice and is called twice, it could panic on the second call when
erroneously accessing a nil'd alloc.
The fix is to not copy the proposed alloc slice and pass the slice
returned by the 1st RemoveAllocs call to the 2nd call, thus maintaining
the trimmed length.
The existing version constraint uses logic optimized for package
managers, not schedulers, when checking prereleases:
- 1.3.0-beta1 will *not* satisfy ">= 0.6.1"
- 1.7.0-rc1 will *not* satisfy ">= 1.6.0-beta1"
This is due to package managers wishing to favor final releases over
prereleases.
In a scheduler versions more often represent the earliest release all
required features/APIs are available in a system. Whether the constraint
or the version being evaluated are prereleases has no impact on
ordering.
This commit adds a new constraint - `semver` - which will use Semver
v2.0 ordering when evaluating constraints. Given the above examples:
- 1.3.0-beta1 satisfies ">= 0.6.1" using `semver`
- 1.7.0-rc1 satisfies ">= 1.6.0-beta1" using `semver`
Since existing jobspecs may rely on the old behavior, a new constraint
was added and the implicit Consul Connect and Vault constraints were
updated to use it.
Fixes documentation inaccuracy for spread stanza placement. Spreads can
only exist on the top level job struct or within a group.
comment about nil assumption
Adds checks for affinity and constraint changes when determining if we
should update inplace.
refactor to check all levels at once
check for spread changes when checking inplace update
Currently, using a Volume in a job uses the following configuration:
```
volume "alias-name" {
type = "volume-type"
read_only = true
config {
source = "host_volume_name"
}
}
```
This commit migrates to the following:
```
volume "alias-name" {
type = "volume-type"
source = "host_volume_name"
read_only = true
}
```
The original design was based due to being uncertain about the future of storage
plugins, and to allow maxium flexibility.
However, this causes a few issues, namely:
- We frequently need to parse this configuration during submission,
scheduling, and mounting
- It complicates the configuration from and end users perspective
- It complicates the ability to do validation
As we understand the problem space of CSI a little more, it has become
clear that we won't need the `source` to be in config, as it will be
used in the majority of cases:
- Host Volumes: Always need a source
- Preallocated CSI Volumes: Always needs a source from a volume or claim name
- Dynamic Persistent CSI Volumes*: Always needs a source to attach the volumes
to for managing upgrades and to avoid dangling.
- Dynamic Ephemeral CSI Volumes*: Less thought out, but `source` will probably point
to the plugin name, and a `config` block will
allow you to pass meta to the plugin. Or will
point to a pre-configured ephemeral config.
*If implemented
The new design simplifies this by merging the source into the volume
stanza to solve the above issues with usability, performance, and error
handling.
When checking driver feasability for an alloc with multiple drivers, we
must check that all drivers are detected and healthy.
Nomad 0.9 and 0.8 have a bug where we may check a single driver only,
but which driver is dependent on map traversal order, which is
unspecified in golang spec.
When a Client declares a volume is ReadOnly, we should only schedule it
for requests for ReadOnly volumes. This change means that if a host
exposes a readonly volume, we then validate that the group level
requests for the volume are all read only for that host.
Also includes unit tests for binpacker and preemption.
The tests verify that network resources specified at the
task group level are properly accounted for
Adds a new Prerun and Postrun hooks to manage set up of network namespaces
on linux. Work still needs to be done to make the code platform agnostic and
support Docker style network initalization.
When an alloc is due to be rescheduleLater, it goes through the
reconciler twice: once to be ignored with a follow up evals, and once
again when processing the follow up eval where they appear as
rescheduleNow.
Here, we ignore them in the first run and mark them as stopped in second
iteration; rather than stop them twice.
Currently, when an alloc fails and is rescheduled, the alloc desired
state remains as "run" and the nomad client may not free the resources.
Here, we ensure that an alloc is marked as stopped when it's
rescheduled.
Notice the Desired Status and Description before and after this change:
Before:
```
mars-2:nomad notnoop$ nomad alloc status 02aba49e
ID = 02aba49e
Eval ID = bb9ed1d2
Name = example-reschedule.nodes[0]
Node ID = 5853d547
Node Name = mars-2.local
Job ID = example-reschedule
Job Version = 0
Client Status = failed
Client Description = Failed tasks
Desired Status = run
Desired Description = <none>
Created = 10s ago
Modified = 5s ago
Replacement Alloc ID = d6bf872b
Task "payload" is "dead"
Task Resources
CPU Memory Disk Addresses
0/100 MHz 24 MiB/300 MiB 300 MiB
Task Events:
Started At = 2019-06-06T21:12:45Z
Finished At = 2019-06-06T21:12:50Z
Total Restarts = 0
Last Restart = N/A
Recent Events:
Time Type Description
2019-06-06T17:12:50-04:00 Not Restarting Policy allows no restarts
2019-06-06T17:12:50-04:00 Terminated Exit Code: 1
2019-06-06T17:12:45-04:00 Started Task started by client
2019-06-06T17:12:45-04:00 Task Setup Building Task Directory
2019-06-06T17:12:45-04:00 Received Task received by client
```
After:
```
ID = 5001ccd1
Eval ID = 53507a02
Name = example-reschedule.nodes[0]
Node ID = a3b04364
Node Name = mars-2.local
Job ID = example-reschedule
Job Version = 0
Client Status = failed
Client Description = Failed tasks
Desired Status = stop
Desired Description = alloc was rescheduled because it failed
Created = 13s ago
Modified = 3s ago
Replacement Alloc ID = 7ba7ac20
Task "payload" is "dead"
Task Resources
CPU Memory Disk Addresses
21/100 MHz 24 MiB/300 MiB 300 MiB
Task Events:
Started At = 2019-06-06T21:22:50Z
Finished At = 2019-06-06T21:22:55Z
Total Restarts = 0
Last Restart = N/A
Recent Events:
Time Type Description
2019-06-06T17:22:55-04:00 Not Restarting Policy allows no restarts
2019-06-06T17:22:55-04:00 Terminated Exit Code: 1
2019-06-06T17:22:50-04:00 Started Task started by client
2019-06-06T17:22:50-04:00 Task Setup Building Task Directory
2019-06-06T17:22:50-04:00 Received Task received by client
```
Fix `TestServiceSched_NodeDown` for checking that the migrated allocs
are actually marked to be stopped.
The boolean logic in test made it skip actually checking client status
as long as desired status was stop.
Here, we mark some jobs for migration while leaving others as running,
and we check that lost flag is only set for non-migrated allocs.
This adds a `nomad alloc stop` command that can be used to stop and
force migrate an allocation to a different node.
This is built on top of the AllocUpdateDesiredTransitionRequest and
explicitly limits the scope of access to that transition to expose it
under the alloc-lifecycle ACL.
The API returns the follow up eval that can be used as part of
monitoring in the CLI or parsed and used in an external tool.
Currently when operators need to log onto a machine where an alloc
is running they will need to perform both an alloc/job status
call and then a call to discover the node name from the node list.
This updates both the job status and alloc status output to include
the node name within the information to make operator use easier.
Closes#2359
Cloess #1180
IOPS have been modelled as a resource since Nomad 0.1 but has never
actually been detected and there is no plan in the short term to add
detection. This is because IOPS is a bit simplistic of a unit to define
the performance requirements from the underlying storage system. In its
current state it adds unnecessary confusion and can be removed without
impacting any users. This PR leaves IOPS defined at the jobspec parsing
level and in the api/ resources since these are the two public uses of
the field. These should be considered deprecated and only exist to allow
users to stop using them during the Nomad 0.9.x release. In the future,
there should be no expectation that the field will exist.
This adds constraints for asserting that a given attribute or value
exists, or does not exist. This acts as a companion to =, or !=
operators, e.g:
```hcl
constraint {
attribute = "${attrs.type}"
operator = "!="
value = "database"
}
constraint {
attribute = "${attrs.type}"
operator = "is_set"
}
```
This commit allows the ConstraintChecker to test values that do not exist.
This is useful when wanting to _exclude_ given nodes from executing a
job, for example, if you wanted to give canary nodes an attribute, and
not run critical services on them, you may specify something like the
below, but not want to tag all other nodes with the inverse.
```hcl
constraint {
attribute = "${node.attr.canary}
operator = "!="
value = "1"
}
```
This also requires all constraint checkers to allow for nil target
values, as they will no longer be short circuited by resolving a target.
Also changes the logic for score when there is more than one task
requesting a device. Since inter task affinities are already normalized,
we take the average of the scores across tasks.